PHIL 331: Ancient Philosophy
Ancient Greek Culture and Thought Project
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Blundell, Sue. Women in Ancient Greece.
Alcuin/Clemens General Collection HQ1134 .B58 1995 (Both libraries have a
copy.)
This is a fairly recent and seemingly balanced view of
women in ancient Greece. In recent decades many feminist scholars have
explored this question, through literature, through legal documents, etc.
Blundell’s book provides a good overview.
- Brann ,Eva. The Music of the Republic: Essays on Socrates'
Conversations and Plato's Writings, Paul Dry Books, 2004. Library does
not own.
Eva Brann is the former Dean of Saint John’s College (the Great Books school) in Annapolis, Maryland. This book is about more than Plato’s
Republic: the “Republic” of the title is the republic of Athens. I have ordered the book myself.
- Brisson, Luc. How Philosophers Saved Myths. BL727 .B7513 2004.
A recent book by a French scholar with a slightly
“post-modern” bent. Philosophers, Plato in particular, are generally thought to
have disliked and attacked myths and mythology, so this has a surprising
approach.
- D’Etienne, Marcel & Vernant, Jean-Pierre—Cunning Intelligence in Greek
Culture and Society. Alcuin General Collection Call #: DF78 .V4813 1982.
Very interesting examination of a different (and earlier)
kind of intelligence than the wisdom of the philosophers. These are two
excellent and prolific French scholars. This book is out of print, but there are
two paperbacks selling for $115.58 on the web. I have a paperback copy. Am I a
moron for not putting mine up for sale? You read it and judge.
- Dodds, E(ric). R(obertson). Greeks and the Irrational
Alcuin General Collection Call #: BF1421 .D6: Being recalled.
This book is a classic. It will provide a contrast to the
Platonic and Aristotelian emphasis on reason , and primarily examines, if I
recall correctly, Greek literature (e.g., Euripides’ Bacchae).
- Dover, Kenneth J. Greek Homosexuality. Cambridge:
Harvard UP, 1978, 1989.
Clemens General Collection HQ76.3.G8 D68 1978.
This became a real classic once Michel Foucault sang it’s praises in the
second volume of his History of Sexuality (see below). Foucault is more
daring, but he knows Dover laid the groundwork for his own research and
thinking.
- Dover, K(enneth) J. Greek Popular Morality in the Time of Plato
and Aristotle. Oxford: Blackwell, 1974. (Reprint by Hackett
Publishing, 1994). Alcuin BJ182 .D68.
This is broader that the book narrowly focused on Greek homosexuality, and
very accessible to non-specialists. It might be better than the previous
selection and is less intimidating than the Foucault (below).
- Foucault, Michel, The Use of Pleasure (History of Sexuality,
Volume 2).
Clemens General Collection HQ12 .F6813 1980.
When I was in graduate school, Foucault was all the rage—in every subject
area, from literature to philosophy to history and sociology and political
science—almost every field except engineering and the natural sciences
(except medicine!) You’ll have to be patient with his emphasis on Greek
terms, but he’s very careful and thorough and intentionally teaches his
readers what the terms mean and why they are important, This book (the whole
trilogy, but especially this volume) made a big splash when published.
- Hadot, Pierre. Philosophy as a Way of Life. Clemens: B105.S66
H3313 1995.
Hadot is a scholar’s scholar. He began as a scholar of early Christian
thought, and was led back to the Neo-Platonists and this to Plato and
Aristotle themselves. The main essays in this book examine “Philosophy as a
spiritual exercise.” It’s a learned work but an important and extremely
insightful approach. [This or the next; not both].
- Hadot, Pierre. What is Ancient Philosophy? Alcuin B172
H33513 2002.
This book takes Hadot’s thesis, laid out in the above work,
and traces it through earlier thinkers, including the Pre-Socratics and Plato
himself, then on to Aristotle and into Hellenistic and Neo-Platonic schools
(late Greek and Roman period). It really expands his thesis of the earlier books
to the whole ancient “period” and even leads on into medieval thought. Some
question whether Hadot reads too much “backwards”—reading his legitimate
insights into the Neoplatonics back into Plato and Aristotle—but he’s right that
philosophy was for the ancients a live issue and not a scholarly game.
- Hanson, Victor. The Western Way of War: Infantry Battle in Classical
Greece, 2nd edition.
Alcuin General Collection Call #: U33 .H36 1989.
A friend describes Hanson as “a conservative, but not as pretentious and
vapid as William Bennett.” Hanson is the expert of Greek warfare and the
history of warfare. And if one judges by what they did and not only what
they said and wrote, war is right up there with philosophy and sculpture and
drama as favorite pastimes in Ancient Greece.
- Lloyd, G. E. R. Early Greek Science: Thales to
Aristotle. New York: Norton, 1970.
The libraries don’t have this either. They have a couple of
other Lloyd books. I’ll order this from Amazon.com. Lloyd is the authority on
the development of Greek science (as well as early Chinese science and the
comparison between them).
- Lloyd, Geoffrey Ernest Richard. Magic, Reason and Experience:
Studies in the Origins and Development of Greek Science. Clemens
General Collection Q127.G7 L59.
This may be too advanced and not as a good a choice as the previous volume,
but if you are science-minded you might take a look.
- Lloyd, G. E. R. The Revolutions of Wisdom: Studies in the Claims
and Practice of Ancient Greek Science. Alcuin General Collection
Q127.G7 L595 1987.
Ditto on the above. This has the look of a collection of articles probably
intended more for specialists in the field. But a group could find chapters
of this and the previous that they could put together.
- Loraux, Nicole. The Children of Athena. Clemens HQ1075.5.G8 L6713
1993.
This woman is scary smart. She knows so much that you can get snowed under, and
she’s a bit “post-modern” in her approach. She writes so much that I can’t imagine
she has much of a social life, but for scholars, books are their social life.
This book examines the paradoxical nature of the Athenian’s allegiance to a female
goddess who nevertheless was not herself born of a mother, but sprang fully formed
from the head of Zeus, the (male) head-honcho god.
- Munn, Mark Henderson. The School of History: Athens in the Age of
Socrates. Clemens General Collection DF277 .M86 2000.
This book comes highly recommended by a young scholar (my age!) The author
focuses on Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, which was
the defining event of late 5th century Athens. Alcibiades, who we will meet
in the Symposium, figures strongly in this exploration of the
Athenians’ sense of their own history.
- Nussbaum, Martha. The Fragility of Goodness : Luck and Ethics in Greek
Tragedy and Philosophy, Alcuin General Collection BJ192 .N87 1996.
(2001 edition being recalled).
This launched Martha Nussbaum’s career—one of the foremost scholars of
ancient philosophy and law in the US today. (She’s also a personality
who knows she’s a personality and milks it for what it’s worth. And she’s
smart, smart, smart.) Maybe as much or more on tragedy as on philosophy.
- Russo, Lucio. Forgotten Revolution: How Science Was Born in 300 BC and
Why it Had to Be Reborn, Berlin: Springer, 2004. Library does not
own.
Damn, why don’t the CSB/SJU libraries have this book!?
Maybe because science, as taught in the contemporary USA, is completely
ahistorical? I’ve ordered it for the libraries. We could interlibrary-loan the
Winona State copy and photocopy the book if a group is interested.
- Snell, Bruno. The Discovery of the Mind: in Greek Philosophy and
Literature
Alcuin: B173 .S6213 1982.
This is very interesting—at least to someone like me.
Didn’t people always know they had minds? Apparently not—at least not the way we
think of the mind. And the way we think of the mind, like it or not (unless
you’ve achieved Buddha-like enlightenment and detachment) is predicated on these
discoveries that Snell traces. The period he covers is mostly
up-to-Socrates-and-Plato. He’s a German scholar, so no stone is left unturned.
(French scholars, by contrast, turn one stone, say Voilà! and assume the
rest of the stones will follow suit; the Germans turn them all and show how
precisely they do follow suit.)
- Vernant, Jean-Pierre, Myth and Society in Ancient Greece—not in
CSB/SJU Libraries.
The “not-in” status will soon be remedied. My own copy is underway from
Amazon.com. I chose this over a couple other options because it’s more
generally applicable to aspects of Greek culture. (I already have Vernant’s
book on Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece and it’s great, but we’re
not reading tragedies.)
- Vernant, Jean-Pierre, The Origins of Greek Thought. Alcuin
Call #: DF78 .V4813 1982.
In this book, Vernant turns his own analysis to the
formation of modes of thought that produced what we call “classical Greece.”
Currently this book has one review—Three stars=mediocre— on Amazon.com, by
someone who signs herself “Tammy Jo Eckhart” and is from Bloomington,
Indiana—clearly a grad student or faculty member at University of Indiana.
Vernant is hugely smart, and he’s given three stars by “Tammy Jo”: you decide
who to believe. Whether you have enough background to process what Vernant is
telling you is a different question.
- Zaidman, Louise Bruit, Pauline Schmitt Pantel & Paul Cartledge,
Religion in the Ancient Greek City. Alcuin General Collection BL785
.Z3513 1992.
This book is a very good synthesis of much more dry and analytic scholarship
that has gone on for centuries, but especially throughout the 20th century.
I had to pry it out of the hands of Fr. Dale Launderville, who is returning
it so I can put it on reserve. Not sure how soon it will get there, but it
may be worth the wait.